[originally posted 1/7/09, updated 6/15/10, updated 7/13/11, updated 10/20/11 (Atlantides was experiencing some difficulties but is back in operation), updated 1/19/12, updated 3/14/13, updated (Archaeoweb added) 5/7/13]
Tom Elliott has built a set of news feed aggregators for topics relating to Ancient Studies. Each of these keeps track of a variety of websites, blogs, and other entities, and informs you when any of them is updated or added to. Look at the Atlantides: Feed Aggregators for Ancient Studies page, or choose one of them from the list below:
Do you use or know of other feed aggregators useful for ancient world studies? Let me know!
Tom Elliott has built a set of news feed aggregators for topics relating to Ancient Studies. Each of these keeps track of a variety of websites, blogs, and other entities, and informs you when any of them is updated or added to. Look at the Atlantides: Feed Aggregators for Ancient Studies page, or choose one of them from the list below:
- Maia Atlantis: Ancient World Bloggers
- This aggregator brings together content from the blogs of the members of the Ancient World Bloggers Group and the eClassics Community, as well as other blogs touching on ancient studies.
- Electra Atlantis: Digital Approaches to Antiquity
- This aggregator brings together content from "ancient world" blogs that also focus on, or frequently address, issues of digital scholarship and teaching, as well as content from blogs devoted to the new (digital) humanities, digital scholarly publishing and open content/data.
- EpiDoc: News and Views
- This aggregator brings together blog posts about the EpiDoc customization of the Text Encoding Initiative (it does not include the EpiDoc SVN Commits Feed, nor the revision feeds for the EpiDoc Documentation Wiki and the EpiDoc Roadmap Wiki).
- ISAW Resources
- This aggregator provides information about the latest updates to the growing collection of online resources provided by the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World and its collaborators.
- Pleiades: News and Views
- This aggregator brings together blog posts about the Pleiades Project from the project's participants. It does not include the Pleiades Trac Timeline (with SVN commits).
- Potamos: Digital Antiquity Data
- This aggregator brings together feeds that report additions and updates to data content of various projects related to the ancient world. It does not include blog posts of any kind. In some cases Potamos content is included in one of the other aggregators; however, I am considering pulling same so that it only appears in Potamos.
- Merope Atlantis: Ancient Inscriptions
- This aggregator brings together images and texts of (mostly) Greek and Roman inscriptions from Flickr and various other sources.
- Taygete Atlantis: Excavation Blogs
- This aggregator brings together blog posts directly related to specific ancient-world, archaeological excavations and surveys.
Other feed aggregators
- added 7 May 2013 - Archaeoweb
- From Hembo Pagi: "As Google Reader is about to disappear soon I thought that I should set up a small website for myself where i can follow all the archaeology and technology related blogs. So I did http://archaeoweb.net/. I have collected about 40 blogs at the moment. If you run a blog and wish to share it with me (and rest of the world) please submit it via the form on the page."
- Blogs en Χείρων · Chiron
- This blog aggregator -- part of the collaborative Χείρων · Chiron project -- gathers content from nearly 150 mostly Spanish-language, classics-oriented blogs; almost none of these are represented in Maia or Electra. Subscribe: Blogs en Χείρων · Chiron (Atom Feed).
- Digital Data Interest Group News Feed
- This feed aggregates sources of interest to professional archaeologists concerned with the creation, use, dissemination and preservation of digital content. Eric Kansa created this feed on behalf of the Society for American Archaeology's (SAA) Digital Data Interest Group (DDIG). IMPORTANT NOTE: The content expressed on this feed are not those of SAA. Links contained on this feed do not constitute endorsement of those linked sites.
Do you use or know of other feed aggregators useful for ancient world studies? Let me know!